MrMessiah wrote:Answering the second part, about society norms because its a bee in my bonnet.
Be careful of mixing up 'gender' and 'gender role', which might seem like a fine line but its an important one that people critical of trans issues deliberately blur.
Gender role being the 'how you act / what you do' thing which is largely cultural. Which feminism correctly identifies as ridiculous and attempts to demolish - theres no reason why anyone of any gender should conform to a gender role.
Gender on the other hand exists seperately to that and informs how you feel about your own body. Its the face you expect to see in the mirror, the concept of self and how it relates to your physical sex. In trans people it manifests in various ways but boiling down to (and Im simplifying) "my body is wrong". It is the anatomy... and thats why the treatment involves anatomy.
This misunderstanding hasnt been helped by bad media portrayal, and even the medical community set up to help trans people - demanding that they conform to a particular gender role and requiring a backstory that encompasses it - and withholding medical treatment until they comply. This is getting slowly better but theres still a lot of it about.
Now I have little knowledge or experience of such issues, but I'm interested in the distinction you make between gender and gender 'roles' - is it purely about anatomy for transgender people?
The reason why I ask is that as I understand it, there are observed evolutionary distinctions between genders that are behavioural (if that's the right word) as well as anatomical, that are necessarily tied in with gender 'roles' because they are formed from the obvious difference in roles in childbirth and child rearing. Perhaps I'm misunderstanding what you mean by gender roles?
Surely if someone feels that they their body doesn't match the gender that they feel they are, then that actually reinforces that idea that gender is behavioural as well as anatomical? i.e the behavioural (how one feels and hence acts) doesn't match the anatomical (how one is physically)?
Looking at it from another angle, if gender roles were purely cultural and could be destroyed, then would the need to change gender then disappear?
Again, perhaps I've misinterpreted what you mean by gender and gender roles - by the way, I'm by no means trying to pick at your points or saying you're wrong.